| Mortgage rates up this
week |
| By Laura
Bruce Bankrate.com |
|
A slight rise across the board in mortgage rates.
The benchmark 30-year fixed-rate mortgage rose 3
basis
points to 6.25 percent this week, according to the Bankrate.com
national survey of large lenders. The mortgages in this week's survey
had an average total of 0.27 discount and origination points. One
year ago, the mortgage index was 6.51 percent; four weeks ago, it
was 6.19 percent.
The 15-year fixed-rate mortgage crept up 5 basis points,
to 5.97 percent. The 5/1 adjustable-rate mortgage saw the biggest
gain with a jump of 7 basis points to 6.12 percent.
This is the third week in a row that the 30-year fixed
has risen. It'll take a while to know whether it's the start of
a trend or just more minor jostling within this somewhat range-bound
scenario my colleague Holden Lewis has mentioned previously in this
space.
One thing is for certain, there's little chance of
not mentioning this week the subprime debacle. While politicians
in state legislatures and in Washington, D.C., point fingers and
try to figure a way to fix it, others are hoping any bailout schemes
don't soak taxpayers.
 |
Weekly national mortgage survey |
 |
| This week's rate: |
6.25% |
5.97% |
6.12% |
| Change from last week: | +0.03 |
+0.05
|
+0.07 |
| Monthly payment: |
$1,015.93 |
$1,389.69 |
$1,002.02 |
| Change from last week: |
+$3.21 |
+$4.45 |
+$7.45 |
Help for distressed homeowners
Ohio has been hit hard by foreclosures in the housing meltdown.
The state's foreclosure rate led the nation last year with 3.38
percent of all loans and more than 11 percent of subprime loans
going under. It's a problem that's been haunting Ohio for a number
of years, and officials have decided it's time to intervene and
help some people hold onto their homes.
This week Ohio began its "Opportunity Loan Refinance
Program." Homeowners at risk of not being able to manage high
monthly mortgage payments due to an adjustable-rate mortgage resetting,
or hardship such as divorce or unemployment, can apply for a 30-year,
6.75 percent fixed-rate loan. A 20-year, fixed-rate second mortgage
is also available to help pay closing costs, fees and the like.
The program is geared toward moderate- and low-income
residents. There are income limits that vary by county but generally
don't exceed an annual income of $80,000, and applicants must live
in the home. At least four hours of one-on-one HUD-approved counseling
is required.
It won't solve the overall problem by a long shot. Initially, the
Ohio Housing Finance Agency, or OFHA, will issue $100 million in
taxable municipal bonds. The state is assuming some 1,000 families
will be helped, since the average loan is expected to be about $100,000.
If the program is successful, OFHA officials say they hope up to
$500 million could be available each year for similar financing.
"No matter how you want to dice the blame, there
are thousands of people who are going to lose their home to this
problem, and we can't, as an agency involved in housing policy,
ignore that," says Blaine Brockman, assistant executive director
of OFHA.
"This isn't taxpayer money. We'll issue the taxable
bond and then the mortgage is collateral for the bond. These are
collateralized by the mortgages themselves so there's no taxpayer
involvement at all."
But not everyone is convinced of that. Economist Ken
Mayland, president of ClearView Economics in Pepper Pike, Ohio,
is well-versed in the problem facing many homeowners in his state.
But he's not giving the state's plan his 100 percent seal of approval.
"If things work out OK then there will be no
burden on the taxpayer; but the devil is in the details. What if
the market deteriorates? What if the (borrower) doesn't perform
and you have to foreclose and home prices decline? Of course, part
of this is to circumvent that, but what if it happens anyway? Then
there isn't enough collateral to back up the bond. Who's holding
the bag then?"
Not all in favor of a bailout
The thought of taxpayers having to bail out homeowners who got in
over their heads irritates the heck out of Patrick Killelea, who's
been blogging
about the housing situation for four years.
"If you're a responsible saver and you want to
buy a house, you're bidding against these crazy people who are either
gambling or lying (about income on their mortgage application) or
just not understanding that they shouldn't be borrowing ten times
their income. So, the thing that bothers me is I have to bid against
them for a house. And now Congress is saying let's bail out these
irresponsible people. No! It's another way of propping up an ultimately
unsustainable housing market. Let the market work."
To be sure, Killelea places plenty of blame on mortgage
lenders who, he says, loosened lending standards because they could
shift the risk to institutions that bought mortgages and sold them
to investors as mortgage-backed securities. And additional blame
is lobbed at the Federal Reserve, which, Killelea claims, looked
the other way in an effort to keep the economy moving.
While some politicians are chatting up plans for tackling
the problem on a nationwide scale, none seem geared at this point
-- with an election in the distance -- to having taxpayers foot
the bill. But as economist Mayland points out, perhaps taxpayers
shouldn't feel safely insulated from the problem. The devil could
be in the details.
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